Iraqi Kurdish ministers boycott cabinet meetings

• Kurdish ministers in the Iraqi capital of Baghdad boycotted the country's cabinet meetings on Thursday.

• Maliki made comments Wednesday, a move many saw as stoking sectarian and ethnic divisions.

• Maliki called on Arbil to stop activities of opposition politicians and political figures of Sunni insurgents.

BAGHDAD, July 10 (Xinhua) -- Kurdish ministers in the Iraqi capital of Baghdad boycotted the country's cabinet meetings on Thursday, protesting remarks made earlier by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki that accused the Kurdish region of being a "base for terrorism," a Kurdish official said.

"We reject such provocative remarks by Maliki which are seen as sort of threat, intimidation and hostility against part of the Iraqi people," Deputy Prime Minister Roz Nuri Shawez told a news conference in Baghdad.

"Such statements are meant to hide the security failure by blaming others, and we announce our boycott to the cabinet meetings in protest against such acts and stances," Shawez said.

Maliki made the controversial comments on Wednesday, a move many saw as stoking sectarian and ethnic divisions in a country facing a severe Islamist insurgency amid a poorly organized military.

"We will never be silent that Arbil become a base of operation for Daash (Arabic first letters of the Islamic State in Iraq and Levant or ISIL), Baath, al-Qaida and the terrorists," Maliki said in his speech.

Maliki called on the authorities of Arbil, the capital of the semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan, to stop the activities of opposition politicians and political figures of Sunni insurgent groups.

For years, the Shiite Iraqi prime minister has been at odds with the Kurds, and the relations between the central government in Baghdad and Kurdistan authorities further deteriorated after the Sunni insurgents took control of several provinces adjacent to the Kurdish region.

Earlier, the regional leader Masoud Barzani said the Kurdish security forces, known as Peshmerga, took over disputed areas in the north after the Iraqi security forces fled abandoning their positions just as the insurgency escalated.

The disputed areas are ethnically mixed with the Kurds, Arabs and Turkmans, as well as other ethnicities. The Kurds have made claims on various disputed areas in northern Iraq, including the oil-rich province of Kirkuk and other areas such as Nineveh, Salahudin and Diyala.

BAGHDAD, July 9 (Xinhua) -- Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki on Wednesday accused the Kurds of providing a base for the operations of the terrorist groups, promising to free all lands seized by the militants.

"We will never be silent that Arbil become a base of operation for Daash (Arabic first letters of the Islamic State in Iraq and Levant or ISIL), Baath, al-Qaida and the terrorists," Maliki said in his weekly televised speech.Full Story